Sorry about how this looks on screen but the app messed up my formatting!
An offshoot from a "drunk driving" thread as it has veered off course.
This is one for the legal eagles, and perhaps those working towards their OSH qualifications and arguably might have been better posted on the Study Support Forum, though given that appears to now be restricted to IOSH Members, it seems more sensible to make it more widely available.
Section 14(1) of the Factories Act 1961 said:
Every dangerous part of machinery shall be securely fenced....
....though with some exceptions written into the Act + a few more in the Operations and Unfenced Machinery Regulations (whose date does not immediately come to mind).
However, Section 14 was one of the parts of the Factories Act 1961 (and other H&S legislation) that set "strict liability" duties sometimes errroneously called "absolute duties".
That they were not "absolute" is illustrated by the volume of case law on various aspects of Section 14.
Then we got the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974 and an extension of duties qualified by the words "so far as reasonably practicable" - not entirely new as some duties in the 1961 Act had such a qualification.
However HSWA did have a safety valve in the form of Section 1(2):
(2) The provisions of this Part relating to the making of health and safety regulations as.......... to be progressively replaced by a system of regulations and approved codes of practice operating in combination with the other provisionsof this Part and designed to maintain or improve the standards of health, safety and welfare established by or under those enactments.
So, saying NO to dilution of requirements, right?
But then PUWER comes along and Section 14 of FA 1961 was, in effect, replaced by Regulation 11:
Regulation 11 Dangerous parts of machinery
(1) Every employer shall ensure that measures are taken in accordance with
paragraph (2) which are effective—
(a) to prevent access to any dangerous part of machinery or to any rotating
stock-bar; or
(b) to stop the movement of any dangerous part of machinery or rotating
stock-bar before any part of a person enters a danger zone.
(2) The measures required by paragraph (1) shall consist of—
(a) the provision of fixed guards enclosing every dangerous part or rotating
stock-bar where and to the extent that it is practicable to do so, but
where or to the extent that it is not, then
(b) the provision of other guards or protection devices where and to the
extent that it is practicable to do so, but where or to the extent that it is
not, then
(c) the provision of jigs, holders, push-sticks or similar protection appliances
used in conjunction with the machinery where and to the extent that it is
practicable to do so,
and the provision of such information, instruction, training and supervision as is necessary.
So, NOT a "strict liability" duty though subject to a more stringent qualification than "reasonably practicable" as the "reasonably" is not included.
How is it that this dilution of legal requirements doesn't seem to have been challenged e.g. on the basis that the Minister making the Regulations was "ultra vires", i.e. going beyond their powers by making regulations which appear to fail the constraints set in Section 1(2) of HSWA?
Edited by user 19 June 2024 15:54:24(UTC)
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